Monmouthshire plans to
introduce bag recycling
Residents will recycle using bags if
proposals put to Monmouthshire
County Council's Cabinet
are approved on 4th November.
This would start at the end of November when
the black box scheme ends and the new ‘co-mingled' bag recycling collections
start.
The ideas have been proposed after
councillors asked officers to investigate the option of having more than one
bag to collect recycling from.
A light red bag would be for paper and light
card, and a purple bag would be used for all other recycled materials, such as
cans, bottles and plastics.
The report proposes to start the new service
in the Abergavenny and Monmouth areas from the 30th November and in
the Chepstow, Caldicot and Magor/Undy area next year on 23rd
January.
The changes proposed are part of the
Council's plans to increase recycling across the county. Whilst overall
the council is in the top six councils in Wales
for recycling and composting, the dry recycling (such as paper and cans) in
Monmouthshire is the lowest in Wales.
The new collections will be rolled out to all households, except the most
remote.
If plans are accepted, residents will have a
simpler system for recycling:
- White starch bag (or bulky
bag)
Green waste and food waste will go in a biodegradable
white starch bag. Green waste consists of garden cuttings, grass
clippings, hedge trimmings, vegetarian pet waste, and cardboard. This service is already available to the majority of
Monmouthshire residents.
Paper and light
cardboard will go in the light red bag
All other
recyclable materials will go in the purple bag.
Residual &
non recyclable refuse will go in black bags.
Roger Hoggins, Monmouthshire County Council's
Head of Operations said:
"In June, Cabinet asked officers to
investigate the benefits of a multi-bag system, coupled with which feedback
from the recycling industry and the Welsh Assembly suggests that some
segregation of recycling materials will improve their value.
"Using a multi-bag system rather than a
single ‘co-mingled' bag retains the convenience of a bag system but offers
better quality recyclates."
The move will mean that the ‘co-mingled'
bags will be introduced as planned but the system will use an extra bag that
sorts paper and card from other recycling material. Officers have found
that this increases the value of the paper they collect but gives residents the
convenience of not having to separate all recyclable material.
Roger Hoggins continued:
"We have looked at alternatives and
recognised that the majority of councils in Wales, including the best
performing authority, now provide a household dry recycling service using what
is known as a ‘co-mingled bag system'.
"Often this is a single bag, collected
weekly, that contains all recycling materials. We will be introducing two bags
to improve the quality of the materials collected. The bags are collected
together and taken to a Materials Recycling Facility (MRF) where the contents
are sorted and processed.
"When the bags are delivered to households
they will include a leaflet with guidance on what goes in each bag."
"The system will use an extra bag that
sorts paper and card from other recycling material. Officers have found
that this increases the value of the paper they collect but gives residents the
convenience of not having to separate all recyclable material."
"We think that this will increase the amount
we recycle. We know that some residents are committed and passionate
about recycling whilst others are willing to recycle but want the system must
be convenient and easy to use.
"It's
been a hit in our local trial of co-mingled sacks where residents told us they
find it simple and easy to use. Other authorities that have changes to a
co-mingled service have consistently seen an improvement in their dry recycling
performance."
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